All of their slugging prowess made John Sterling one busy man on Saturday night.

The Bronx Bombers put on quite a power display in K.C. — belting a season-high five homers in their 8-3 victory over the Royals at Kauffman Stadium.

"You don't see that in Scranton," said Clint Frazier, a member of this lethal lineup for the first time in 2018. "It was fun. I'm still kinda in awe. I didn't have a spring training with these guys. So to see it in person, I guess that's why they call us the Baby Bombers. Guys are out there mashing. It's fun to be a part of that."

Sterling produced his best call of the evening when Gleyber Torres belted a three-run shot over the State Farm sign behind the bullpen in left-field to give the Yankees a 5-2 lead.

"Like a Good Gleyber, Torres is there," Sterling sang.

Giancarlo Stanton added a 432-foot solo shot himself after barely missing out on two more homers earlier in the game. (John Sleezer/TNS)

Gary Sanchez went 4-for-5 with two homers and three RBI — his 10th career multi-homer game. Sanchez's batting average is just .225, but his on-base plus slugging percentage is .872 — which is around his career mark of .899.

"I'm not looking at average. I'm looking at OPS, on-base percentage, at-bat quality," Aaron Boone said, noting Sanchez's recent patience at the plate despite his lack of results (8 for his previous 38). "When Gary's controlling the zone, he's on a short list of deadly hitters."

Aaron Hicks produced his second inside-the-park homer of 2018 — becoming the first Yankee since Mickey Mantle in 1958 (three) to hit multiple inside-the-parkers in the same season.

"Any time you hear your name in the same sentence with Mickey Mantle it means you're doing something good," Hicks said.

Giancarlo Stanton added a 432-foot solo shot himself after barely missing out on two more homers earlier in the game.

This Murderers' Row 2.0 lineup is too much to handle for opposing hitters on most nights.

Torres' shot proved to be the game-changer, his fourth career homer — all of them traveling over 400 feet (Saturday's blast going 407).

The 21-year-old rookie wunderkind was able to atone for his two fielding misplays in Friday's lackadaisical loss — impressive for a kid that young to say the least.

Gleyber Torres belted a three-run shot over the State Farm contract behind the bullpen in left-field to give the Yankees a 5-2 lead. (Orlin Wagner/AP)

"One of the things we love about him is his makeup," Boone said of Torres. "He has a tough night — he doesn't flinch. He plays the game with a lot of confidence because he's really good at it. I don't worry about him at all. It was a nice bounce-back for him."

Torres didn't miss a beat.

"I know last night I had a big error," he said. "But I tried to be a little more focused today and prepare a little bit more."

Luis Severino (7-1) struggled with his fastball command but still managed to pitch six innings, allowing three runs on eight hits.

The offense did the rest — with Clint Frazier getting a chance to see the show first-hand, and take part in all the laughs and celebrations as well.